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I'm guessing you're not disputing the idea that we can't help but effect the world in multiple ways.
(e.g. your purchases/work for bitcoin has effected the world. The same would be the case if any of us died taking our seed words to the grave with us).
Instead, I'm guessing that you've not got, nor seemingly ever had a strong Bitcoin 'game plan'...
However, I think such game plans can be a lot of phooey. People take themselves too seriously and, with help of their greater ego, think that they're bigger than they are.
We can point to many of the richest people in the world and see how they've tried to force their will - and seen, in reality, just how puny and ineffectual they really are. There's old joke that says this in condensed for: Give God a laugh, tell them what your plans are!
There's an old story of an ancient King of Britain called King Canute. The popular version of the story is that he said he had so much power and influence that he'd stop the tide from coming in.
This paints the king in everyone's imagination as a very foolish and vain king.
However, the truth of the matter was that he was in fact very wise, clear thinking and humble guy. His act of bading the tide not to come in was in fact him intensionally demonstrating that he wasn't all-powerful and that he was influenced by all of the greater, external factors that we all have no influence over, but instead, are influenced by.
I think the greater thing that we can all do is to look at our motivations in our life, and to hone and refine them.
Perhaps you personally haven't got any clear motivations in your mind as of yet (and of course, may never have) - but this post does show that you're reflecting on this fact, and sharing it with us here.
In the final anslysis, we are all really just little specks of dust that'll be lost and forgotten in the mists of time - but what we've done will forever be ingrained on the one big universal blockchain of life.
Hey, I'm getting kinda deep and philosophical here - that's unusual (I'm usually here as the court jester, not the bard).
But again, the Court Jester being the opposite to the wise man is also another myth worth exploring...